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Saturday, 16 August 2014

Hi All!This has been sitting in my drafts section for a few weeks, as are a few others,due to crazy pressure at work. So here goes.....You all know how much I love Maybelline Color Show Nail Polishes... I have been building up a decent collection of their shades. The shades are great, the pigments excellent, takes just two coats to get the true colour and has a quick drying formula. AND very reasonably priced to boot!Today I am using two colors: Coral Craze and Bold Gold.Coral Craze is a nice pinkish coral shade which suits a fairly wide range of Indian skin tone.

Bold Gold has miniscule glitter particles and has a lovely muted effect that can be worn to work as well.

Friday, 15 August 2014

Hey Everyone!Its been a while since I have posted a food post, so today I am going to share with you a recipe that happened quite by accident.The husband, after some nagging on my part brought in some So I wondered how I should prepare them. I did not want to do the regular Chinese style or the bengali style dish........So this is what I did:cleaned and deveined 500g of:

Prawns

1 teaspoon pepper powder

Crushed pepper corns

1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon turmeric powder

Mix all of these ingredients and keep aside.

Marinated Prawns

I then heated some oil in a wok and fried the prawns till golden.

Fry prawns

In the same oil I threw in a sprig or two of curry leaves

along with finely chopped onions and 1/2 a tsp of ginger garlic paste.

Once the onions are browned, I added 1/2 a tsp of turmeric, 1 tsp of coriander powder, 1/2 tsp of chilli powder, 1/2 tsp of crushed black pepper and salt to taste.I wanted to add tomatoes, but realised I had run out. It was too late in the evening so I just added a dash of tomato ketchup.Once the spices were done, I threw in the fried prawns and folded them in. Since the gravy looked too dry, I added half a cup of water and let it simmer for about 10 minutes.

This is what it looked like just before serving...I couldn't get a picture of what the final dish looked like since the husband had already claimed the wok for himself!!

The curry leaves gave the dish such a different dimension! Why don't you try it too and let me know.................

Thursday, 7 August 2014

I just couldn't help but share this article with you. Amazing company, great product! I was introduced to this brand of soap during my trip to southern India about 10 years ago. I have used this soap off and on and have liked it too, but did not know the story behind this brand.Now that I know, I have a new respect for the product and the company.Read on to find out why.......

All employees of AVA Cholayil Health Care Pvt Ltd start
their day with a 15-minute yoga session. Why? It is important for them
to remain physically fit and mentally alert at work, which is not only
unique but also quite stressful. The 262 employees, spread across two
factories in Chennai and one each in Pondicherry and Bangalore, make 10
crore bars of bathing soap every year by hand, without the help of
machines and without using a single unit of electricity.

AVA Cholayil Health Care, which sells 15 crore Medimix brand of soaps
annually in south India (two third-party units supply the balance five
crore soap bars), is the largest handmade soap maker in the country, and
probably globally. The company has recently applied for listing in the
Limca Book of Records. Its revenue for 2013/14 stood at Rs 200 crore and
it has a four per cent market share in south India.
Soap-making is predominantly mechanised. Of the four lakh tonnes of
bathing soap manufactured in India, only about 8,000 tonnes are
handmade. The reasons are not far to seek. Handmade soaps are laborious
to make and it is extremely difficult to increase production. It
involves employing a large number of workers, which results in
labour-associated problems. Maintaining consistency in quality, process
integrity and safety are also big challenges. It is for these reasons
handmade soaps have remained a cottage industry, and large soap makers
such as Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL), Wipro and Godrej have shifted to
mechanised production.

Through ingenuity, AVA Cholayil Health Care has done the impossible
of scaling up its handmade soap-making process to an industrial scale.
Its output in 2013/14, according to ORG, was 6,417 tonnes, which
accounted for almost 80 per cent of the total handmade soap output in
the country. Chandrika Soap, now part of Wipro, is the only other major
handmade soap maker with output of 1,767 tonnes.
The origin of AVA Cholayil can be traced to the kitchen of Dr V.P.
Sidhan, a physician who worked in the Indian Railways and belonged to a
family of ayurveda practitioners in Trichur, Kerala. He used oils which
his ancestors had effectively used to treat skin diseases, to produce
soap and launched Medimix in 1969.
Innovation has kept us going so far and I am sure we will come up with a solution to remain a handmade soap maker forever.

A.V. ANOOP, MD, AVA Cholayil Health Care
He kept the process handmade as there was very little money to
invest. (The Cholayil group, which he set up, split amicably by the turn
of the century. AVA Cholayil is headed by the founder's son-in-law A.V.
Anoop and handles the southern market, while the rest of India is
handled by Dr Sidhan's son V.S. Pradeep. Both the groups share the
Medimix brand, but Cholayil has mechanised some parts of the production
process.)

Medimix was initially sold as a skin-care soap. Its transformation as
a consumer product began in early 1980s when Anoop entered the
business. "After the brand's transformation as an FMCG [Fast-Moving
Consumer Goods] product, we expanded by adding more factories but
retained the handmaking process," says Anoop. The fact that handmade
soaps had nil excise duty compared to 12.36 per cent for soaps
manufactured using the mechanised process was a motivation (this benefit
was removed in 2005). There, however, were other reasons as well.

"Going mechanised would have meant letting go of the bulk of the 300
employees we had. It was against our social consciousness," explains
Anoop. There were two other reasons. Handmade soaps are superior to
machine-made soaps as they are skin-friendly. The process enables use of
a higher proportion of coconut oil (which is good for the skin), adding
more additives, especially ayurvedic herbs, and retaining natural
glycerine, which leaves the skin soft. Also, the manufacturing process
is environment-friendly as it does not use electricity at all.Many Challenges

The
decision to remain a handmade manufacturer opened up many challenges.
No one, till then, had scaled up a handmade soap manufacturing process
beyond a point and demand for Medimix was rising sharply. Production in
late-1990s was just six crore units annually.
The other challenge was people. The handmade process is backbreaking
and unsafe. Workers have to physically lift hot oil, cart it to mixing
drums, mix it, remove the soap, cut and pack them. In 1990s, the average
age of the workers was in the mid-20s and the company's management
realised that the workers will not be able to continue doing the work as
they age. "We needed to figure out a way to scale up production, reduce
stress and keep the operation safe," recalls U. Divakaran, Vice
President - Operations. An external consultant appointed by the company
said it was impossible to do so. The company then turned to its workers
for insights in early 2000.

"The workers came up with solutions no management consultants could,"
says Anoop. Why not, for instance, use gravity and make the process
less stressful, they asked. The management realised that such a process
will also help the company dramatically increase production. Machinery
was developed in-house to put this plan into operation. An elevated ramp
was constructed from which trucks downloaded the raw materials-coconut
oil, palm oil and caustic soda lye into storage tanks.
So, using hand-rotated pumps, the raw material was pumped into
overhead tanks. This then flowed into heating and mixing drums placed at
different elevation, thus obviating the need to carry oil.
Hand-rotated wheels were used to mix the ingredients. The soap was
then poured into moulds and left for maturation. The employees then came
up with innovations to cut the mould into plates and bars by designing
machinery that again worked through hand-rotated wheels. The stamping
process, the most accident-prone, was tweaked to make it safe.

The second-biggest challenge in ramping up a handmade process was
labour involvement. Without that, maintaining consistent quality and
adherence to standard operating procedures would be impossible. So, the
management turned its focus to workers welfare. "We increased their
salaries and put in place a system where productivity gains were shared
with employees," says Divakaran. Average monthly salary today is around
Rs 18,000.

To improve productivity, quality, housekeeping and keep innovation
flowing, awards have been instituted and the four factories compete for
them. "The knowledge bank we have set up has 250 ideas given by the
employees," he adds. These measures have improved productivity sharply.
In 2003, the average packing was seven cakes per minute. Now, it is 12.
Workers stamped 4,500 units per day then. Now, it is 12,000. The average
yield per mould (matured soap converted into bars) at 90.56 per cent is
higher than the 85 per cent mechanised operation delivers. Last year,
the aggregate output rose 21 per cent despite a drop in staff strength
from 320 to 262 after the company offered a voluntary retirement scheme.
The company says gaining a pricing premium for its handmade soaps is a
focus area. "We have launched Medimix Clear Glycerine soap. It is
priced higher than classic Medimix and will help in refreshing the
ageing brand," says K.H.S. Manian, President of the company. Despite
attempts by rivals such as HUL, Godrej and Wipro to come up with an
ayurvedic soap, Medimix Classic's appeal remains strong. In fact, in the
mid-1990s, HUL (then Hindustan Lever) tried to acquire Medimix but
Anoop refused to part with the company. "They do not have a background
in ayurveda," says Manian. Today, Medimix Classic accounts for 80 per
cent of the company's sales. The brand ranks among the top 20 in south
India in the Most Trusted Brands of India 2013 Survey by Brand Trust
Report.
While all is well now, Anoop constantly worries about the future. "I
wonder whether we will get workers once this batch retires," he says.
"Innovation has kept us going so far and I am sure we will come up with a
solution to remain a handmade soap maker forever."